Flynn's Arcade is a video game arcade owned and operated by Kevin Flynn. It is a multi-story establishment, with numerous assembled arcade games on the ground floor and office space on the floor above. The upper rooms have been furnished to serve as both a work space and accommodation, in which Flynn lived prior to taking control of ENCOM. The basement level is accessed by way of a secret door hidden behind a TRON arcade game on the ground floor.

The hidden basement room is a cluttered inner sanctum concealing an unlikely assortment of technology installed in 1983. ENCOM servers linked to a sophisticated touch screen desktop form the main workstation. These servers house Flynn's crowning achievement, the Tron system, which he worked on for many years in complete secrecy. They also connect to the laser that enabled Flynn to transport himself inside the Tron system. When entering the Tron system from Flynn's, the receiving end is a digital reconstruction of Flynn's Arcade in Tron City.

The arcade was originally located on Watseka St., which was later renamed Mead St. The arcade's neighborhood appeared to have been a bustling night time amusement and entertainment area at the time, and Flynn's was a popular hang-out for teens and had many video games, including Flynn's own games, Space Paranoids, Matrix Blaster, Vice Squad, Light Cycles, and later TRON. The area has become somewhat run down in the years following Flynn's stay there.

Trivia

Inside the arcade

The neon "Flynn's" sign is one of the few surviving props used in TRON that is still at Disney Studios. It is currently located in the Properties Building.

The building used for Flynn's is located in Culver City, California and is known as "The Hull Building". Built in 1925 by Dr. Foster Hull, it became Culver City's first hospital and later became a Culver City Historic Site.

The address for the building is 9543 Culver Blvd, Culver City, Los Angeles, California 90232.

For the Viral Marketing campaign, a Flynn's Arcade opened at San Diego Comic Con in both 2008 and 2009. The 2008 version contained actual arcade machines of the games that patrons could play for free. A secret room would open behind the TRON game where concept drawings and a life sized Light Cycle were on display. The 2009 version contained the games covered in plastic (to mirror the scene in the film) and the secret room behind the TRON game opened to reveal both a replica of Flynn's lab and The End of the Line Club.

An arcade also opened in London with actual arcade machines of the games, previews of Legacy,TRON: Evolution on console being able to be played and a life sized light cycle on display.

During the scene where Sam walks into the underground office a VAX 1170 disk array is shown just prior to him sitting down behind the console. Besides the laser there is an old Hewlett-Packard Computer possibly a model 35 or 9000 series.

The first song to be played at the Arcade after it's reactivation by Sam Flynn is "Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)" by Journey. This is a nod to the original TRON, in which the first song heard in the film (and also playing in the Arcade) is "Only Solutions," also by Journey.

In the non-canon music video for "Derezzed", there is a arcade machine called "Derezzed" in place of the TRON arcade machine. The Derezzed machine is labelled as being made by ENCOM, just as the TRON machine is labelled as such in TRON: Legacy.

As confirmed by the end credits of Legacy, the other games that were in the arcade were: Asteroids, Atari 2600, Battlezone, Centipede, Crystal Castle, Millipede, Missile Command, Space Duel. Stunt Cycle. Tempest, Warlords, Yar's Revenge, Galaga and Pole's Position. The music and sound effects from Donkey Kong, Space Invaders and Pac Man can also be heard.

In Epic Mickey 2, a 2012 video game, Mickey can visit an unnamed arcade owned by a Gremlin named Flynn, in a reference to the film. The arcade machine leading to the Grid can be seen at the back here.